"Jane Austen Wrecked My Life" is a rom-com for book lovers plagued by reality's disappointments
Agathe harbors the romantic notion that she is living in the wrong century and struggles to finish a book inspired by a fantasy. In the grip of a serious case of writer's block, her life takes a fortuitous turn when she is accepted at a Jane Austen retreat after Félix secretly submits an application on her behalf.
This twist of fate leads to a chance encounter with Oliver (Charlie Anson), Austen's great-great-great-grandnephew, and it's hate at first sight. (How Austen!) Agathe's vomiting on Oliver's shoes is not an auspicious start, nor is calling him 'unbearable, arrogant, and totally stuck up' within earshot. Never mind the moment she accidentally exposes herself to him. Of course, they are perfect for each other, but as situations prompt a détente, Félix arrives to accompany Agathe to the retreat's Ball, widening the path for romantic folly.
'Jane Austen Wrecked My Life' features many literary references and running gags to charm viewers. Piani spoke with Salon about making the film and her love of Austen.
The following interview has been edited for length and clarity.
'Jane Austen Wrecked My Life' is about getting inspiration. What inspired you to write and direct this very literary story as a film, rather than pen it as a novel?
I was a screenwriter for 12 years, so my language is screenwriting, and I have such a huge admiration for writers. Maybe one day I'll write a novel, but I really wanted to do a rom-com. As a viewer, I was missing the arthouse rom-coms from the '90s in England; it seemed like they disappeared. So, it was a desire to write something that I wanted to see as a viewer. It comes from my experience working as a bookseller at Shakespeare and Co., where I have been working for a long time — this place as a theater stage like in 'The Shop Around the Corner,' a place where you have so many people who like to read and who dream of writing. How do you make it with high ideals about literature and love?
Agathe kind of stands in her own way, like many an Austen heroine. She is blocked personally (sexually), professionally (writing) and psychologically (she hates being in a car). I like that she is both stubborn (she won't do what she doesn't want to) and determined (she will do what she wants). She wants things on her terms. But she suffers from impostor syndrome and feels like life could pass her by. How did you conceive of her character?
When I started to think about the character, I wanted to write a story about grief — a woman who is blocked and going to face her desire. That would be her journey. And I didn't want to make a rom-com about a woman being saved by a man or by love. I wanted to make a 2025 rom-com where a woman could have a dream other than finding love. So, she would not have impossible romantic expectations. I like it when characters have dreams — not just goals, but something bigger. If she is not able to write anything because she writes one chapter and feels like such an impostor that she stops, or she is not capable of falling in love or engaging with anyone because she fantasizes too much, and reality is always too disappointing, who can she blame? Then I thought about Jane Austen as a comedic way to open the path for so many impossible romantic expectations. She could be feeling that what she writes is not important enough or too light. I heard that rom-coms are a girly, cheesy genre. But it is a very political genre. When you talk about love and romance, you talk about how people live. It can be very deep and entertaining, and that's what Jane Austen did.
To answer your question, how did I work on this character? I tried to blend a very modern, contemporary character's journey with elements of Jane Austen's work. 'Persuasion' inspired me the most, and Agathe quotes from the book, saying she feels it is 'too late.' I love that 'Persuasion' was written 300 years ago by a woman who had to address the fact that many women are made to feel that it is 'too late' for them. This is so modern! I built the character inspired by Jane Austen's 'Persuasion,' on Jane Austen's life, and on my own experience as a reader, a writer and a bookseller —and my own grief, because I was grieving at the time I wrote this.Then I met the actress who I chose because of her melancholy and weirdness. I love Camille Rutherford because she is not only extremely beautiful, but she doesn't care about being beautiful. She is all about physical comedy and can do all kinds of absurd slapstick. She is not precious, but she is timeless and can play in a Jane Austen book. Together, we created this character who was in my mind and became her interpretation. The more contradictions the character has, the more relatable she is.
Agathe has a Jane Austen for every circumstance. Who is your Austen character?
What is beautiful about Jane Austen is that you can encounter books and characters all your life and change. I feel closest to Anne Elliot myself, because of the weird mix of humor and her melancholy, which is what I tried to do with the tone of the film. But I am also Elizabeth Bennet from 'Pride and Prejudice,' sometimes.
You also feature many other literary references, such as Agathe shelving Julio Cortázar's 'Hopscotch,' consulting the 'I Ching,' namedropping Octavio Paz, and more. What prompted the specific literary references, and what authors inspire you?
There is one book that changed my life — it didn't wreck my life — 'The Golden Notebook' by Doris Lessing. I read it at the right age. What is so exciting and beautiful and mysterious are the encounters we have with books. You have books next to your bed or in your living room for so many years, and somehow you choose a book, and it answers so many questions or creates new ones. I am so amazed by these moments and these encounters with books. I remember being a child and being very disappointed with the idea of having only one life to live. Then I learned how to read, and I discovered you could have as many lives as you wanted because you have books. One of the most compelling, exciting experiences I had as a child was reading "The Diary of Selma Lagerlöf." She was a Swedish writer who received the Nobel Prize. She had a disability, and she was sent to the city for [therapy] and became a writer because she had a long train journey. I remember the emotion of being a child and discovering another child's diary about what it means to write. It was mind-blowing. The book I dream to adapt because of the language and story is 'Light Years' by James Salter. Everyone who loves reading has to deal with the huge frustration of not being able to read enough. It's a sickness.
Can you talk about developing the comedy in the film? There is wordplay, there are sight gags (spitting llamas), there are pratfalls (in a forest), and embarrassment humor (the multiple nude scenes). Every scene features a kind of punchline — some witty, some somber.
I think it is my own taste as a viewer. I became a cinephile because I discovered Billy Wilder and Ernst Lubitsch, and I never got over it. They are the masters. I love physical comedy and slapstick as much as a weird line a character would think and say out loud. I try to mix what I like about life. Comedy is about shame and what we are all trying to hide — all the things that make us poor human creatures — this is the treasure of comedy, being able to laugh about that, but it can be very sad. I love when you feel the core of comedy is a deep sadness, and it is such a catharsis to laugh about it. I looked at actors who were able to physically accommodate that. Camille was funnier and weirder and clumsier — and happier.
The Ball sequence is particularly interesting because we get the entire romance without dialogue. Can you discuss the love triangle in general and that scene in particular?
The love triangle is timeless. It's been done so often, but it is wonderful to explore. I love this dilemma. I wanted the ball scene to be a tribute to all the books and films we love and that we have in mind when we think about Jane Austen. I also wanted it to be the emotional peak of this love triangle. I like that it is more about the bodies and the way they look at each other, which is so cinematic. Silence brings you back to the beginning of cinema. It was a very low-budget film, so we had constraints on what we could afford, but I wanted it to be magical and fulfilling for the audience, so I wanted the camera to dance with the characters. It's the only time the camera is moving. We didn't have money for big lights. We watched 'Amadeus' and thought, "We will put candles everywhere!" We had no money to buy period costumes. A week before shooting the scene, I realized I would not be able to teach them how to dance, so I called an emergency dance teacher who taught them the choreography in four hours!
Do you think, as Oliver does, that Jane Austen is overrated and limited in scope?
People who say that didn't read her. It's a posture.
I confess I did not like 'Emma' when I had to read it in college.
I hate Emma!
But 'Clueless' is the best adaptation ever!
It's soo good. Emma is the only character who is unbearable to me. But Austen does make a point through that character. I'm not sure she likes her so much either.
What Austen easter eggs did you hide in 'Jane Austen Wrecked My Life' that Austen fans should look for?
Two things. When she is inspired after the fantasy in the Chinese restaurant, and she is writing in her room, the desk is full of Jane Austen's books, and the shadow of Austen's face is on the books. And, at the very end, when Agathe imagines the hand of her father touching her shoulder, on her desk is the big book of correspondence between Jane Austen and [her sister] Cassandra.
'Jane Austen Wrecked My Life' is now playing in theaters nationwide.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


San Francisco Chronicle
8 hours ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Dead & Company's drummer is playing two very different S.F. shows — here's why
Jay Lane, the veteran Bay Area drummer known for his deep local roots and genre-spanning versatility, is preparing for two vastly different performances in San Francisco — one in front of tens of thousands of devoted Deadheads at Golden Gate Park, the other a laid-back hometown set with his own band at Thrive City. This weekend, he returns to the spotlight as Dead & Company — featuring original Grateful Dead members Bob Weir and Mickey Hart, alongside John Mayer, Oteil Burbridge, Jeff Chimenti and Lane — headlines a three-night run at the Polo Field, Friday to Sunday, Aug. 1-3. Each show is expected to draw around 60,000 fans, making it one of the largest gatherings in the park since Outside Lands and last year's concert featuring System of a Down. But Lane is equally focused on something smaller. On Aug. 8, he'll lead his group, Jay Lane & the Mayhem, at Thrive City's Harmonic Jam, a free community concert outside Chase Center. 'It's just a few close friends of mine playing some music together,' Lane said. 'It's going to be free, and hopefully we'll just get them dancing. That's my mission.' He's eager to do more shows in San Francisco, where his career began in the early 1980s, playing in groups like the Uptones and the Freaky Executives. 'It'd be nice to play around here more,' he said. 'Lord knows we need more local people playing out.' Although Lane is now firmly embedded in the Grateful Dead orbit, he didn't grow up a fan. 'I wasn't really a Deadhead,' he said. 'I think that's why I got the gig with Bob Weir. He wanted people that didn't have their minds made up about how it was supposed to go. He wanted some fresh takes.' Lane's connection to Dead & Company traces back to his work with Weir's band RatDog in the early '90s. At the time, he admits he knew little about the Dead's expansive catalog. 'I knew 'Touch of Grey,' but that was about it,' he said. 'And then I started listening and I was like, oh man, this goes deep.' His appreciation for the music grew especially after discovering recordings from the band's famed Europe '72 tour. 'They were writing music together in real time,' Lane said. 'It wasn't about solos — it was like collective, improvised composition. That opened me up.' Outside the Dead universe, Lane's résumé spans a who's who of Bay Area acts — from Alphabet Soup and the Charlie Hunter Trio to Les Claypool's bands Sausage and Primus. That last connection resurfaced recently when Primus launched a global search for a new drummer. Lane, who was part of the band's early lineup, said he wasn't expecting a call from Claypool. 'Les knew better than to ask me,' Lane said. 'We'd been down that road before when the schedules conflicted between the two worlds. But he spoke pretty highly of me during the auditions. He kept mentioning my name as some sort of bar to meet — which is very humbling.' Still, Lane admits that the energy surrounding the Grateful Dead community is unlike anything else. 'It's wild,' he said. Asked if the Golden Gate Park shows are truly a farewell for Dead & Company, Lane offered a measured response. 'I wouldn't know, man,' he said. 'That might be it for this year. But you know, if they call, I'll pick up.' As for the Thrive City gig, Lane said it provides a refreshing change of pace. 'Last time, there was like 20 people there,' he said. But with anticipation high during the Dead's 60th anniversary summer, that number may rise dramatically. Wherever he ends up playing, Lane says he's just grateful to keep moving. 'Here's hoping for some more gigs,' he said. 'It sure is fun.'


San Francisco Chronicle
10 hours ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Rare photos of Grateful Dead in S.F. by Jim Marshall showcased in new book
When an up-and-coming Peninsula band recently renamed the Grateful Dead moved to San Francisco in 1966, Jim Marshall was already an established national rock 'n' roll photographer whose fame exceeded theirs. That gave him immediate access to the band in their big Victorian at 710 Ashbury St. They welcomed him to drop by any time, with the two Leica cameras he wore around his neck, one loaded with Kodachrome color slides and the other black-and-white. He wound up making some 10,000 pictures of the band, at home and in concert in their home city — which often meant a stage quickly put up in Golden Gate Park or the connecting Panhandle. Marshall's images of the musicians at the park, in sunglasses or squinting in the daylight, are featured more than any other single venue in ' The Grateful Dead by Jim Marshall: Photos and Stories from the Formative Years, 1966–1977.' The coffee table issue, which weighs five pounds and costs $50, will be released nationally Aug. 5 by Chronicle Books, an independent publishing house. But bookstores Bay Area-wide are offering it early by special arrangement to coincide with the 60th anniversary weekend of shows by Dead & Company at the Polo Field in Golden Gate Park. The band's lead guitarist, Grammy-winning musician and songwriter John Mayer, wrote the afterword, having given Marshall full access to cover his solo career. The cover lettering is by Fez Moreno, who also designs concert posters for Dead & Company. 'This book is a tribute to the GratefuI Dead, Jim Marshall and San Francisco, in that order,' said Amelia Davis, who spent 13 years as Marshall's assistant, up until his death in 2010. 'It tells you a visual story about the relationship of Jim with his subjects in their environment, and documents an era of access that we are never going to see again.' Marshall was married and divorced twice but never had any children. He left his entire archive to Davis to reward her for loyalty and patience with a personality that was as complex and difficult as the rock stars he depicted. The book features some 265 pictures plus proof sheets that bring it to 900 images total, including candids and performance shots that were never printed and have never been seen. The totality, 288 pages with a psychedelic design, is an indicator that Marshall spent more time with the Dead than with any of the other subjects who gave him preferential treatment, including the Beatles, Bob Dylan, Janis Joplin and the Jefferson Airplane, which was the biggest San Francisco band of that era. 'Jim used to say he never ate or drank anything when he was with the Grateful Dead, because they notoriously dosed everything with acid, and that wasn't his thing' said Davis. 'He considered the band to be family, and we want the readers to feel like family when they go through the book.' The book idea came from Oakland singer-songwriter and Grateful Dead authority David Gans, who pitched it to Davis as a 60th anniversary tribute long before the series of concerts in Golden Gate Park was announced. Marshall left behind a catalog of 3-by-5 notecards referencing every musical act and event he photographed. These corresponded to proof sheets and negatives, but they were not cross-referenced, so Davis had to search through the cards of every other act the band was known to play with and every venue it played at. There was no notecard for Golden Gate Park, but there were notecards for the Artists Liberation Front Free Fair in the Panhandle on Oct. 16, 1966, and the Human Be-In of Jan. 14, 1967, at the Polo Field, the same venue as the Dead & Company shows. There was also a notecard for an impromptu concert after the assassination of Robert F. Kennedy Jr. in 1968. Marshall got lots of shots of band members arguing with San Francisco police — and that's all he got, because that concert never happened due to a lack of permits. Marshall, who was known to be persuasive, somehow managed to get the members of the five major San Francisco bands — the Grateful Dead, Jefferson Airplane, Big Brother & the Holding Company, Quicksilver Messenger Service and the Charlatans — to pose for a group photo in the Panhandle, as if they were a sports team. That image from the book is the ultimate proof of access. 'Jim was everywhere that mattered and he documented it with a photograph,' Davis said.


New York Times
16 hours ago
- New York Times
Did We Miss the Happy Ending in ‘Hamlet'?
To the Editor: Re 'Listen to 'Hamlet.' Feel Better,' by Jeremy McCarter (Opinion guest essay, July 23): I appreciate Mr. McCarter's provocative thoughts on William Shakespeare's 'Hamlet.' I agree with most of them, but the conclusion is off. Hamlet is ready to face death in the lines quoted at the end of this essay, but not because he has found peace, at least not completely. While the play can indeed be read as a coming-of-age story, 'outgrowing' gloom, whether about the past or future, is not really the point. Mr. McCarter points out that Hamlet's curiosity has sustained him through his dark times. But it is something more than that. Hamlet is fiercely dedicated to finding out the truth, revealing it and correcting the lies and calumnies told to conceal it. When he knows his death is near, his final plea to Horatio is to 'tell my story.' Hamlet's great life force comes from his unquenchable desire to help the truth to 'will out,' as it were. The rest, as he says in his dying breath, is silence. Dorothy Dean WaltonMexico City To the Editor: I taught 'Hamlet' for 35 years, mostly to gifted high school seniors. I witnessed numerous adaptations and costume updates. Never did anyone take this tack. I love the idea of an uplifted and resolved Hamlet who has learned to live in the moment! My students would have loved it, too. Particularly in these trying and confusing times. Dana EdenbaumBala Cynwyd, Pa. To the Editor: 'If it be now, 'tis not to come: if it be not to come, it will be now: if it be not now, yet it will come: the readiness is all.' So says Hamlet. This is wisdom beyond common or good sense; it is elemental. And it answers another gloomy Shakespearean character's thesis by showing how to travel the way to dusty death. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.